Has the Book Got a Pulse? Life after the “Terminal” Diagnosis

By:
Prof. Marnie Jones
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Alarming statistics emerge from two recent studies of American reading habits and skills. In "Reading at Risk" (2004), the National Endowment for the Arts issued a “dire” report about American reading habits. If the twenty-year trend continues, the NEA predicts that “literary reading as a leisure activity will virtually disappear in half a century.” Now the National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) reports that prose literacy has significantly declined: it is not that college graduates don’t read,they can’t read. This appears to be the case for texts as straightforward as newspaper articles. Both reports attribute the respective declines to the rise of other media, in particular television and the Internet. This workshop will briefly present the findings of the studies and explore the assumptions that inform the interpretations of the data. Together members of the workshop—publishers, librarians, and academics— will address two over-arching questions. 1] If the data is true, what ought we to do about it to ensure that the rich literary traditions of the past thrive in the future? 2] If the assumptions about the threat from technology are false, what might we do to better understand the phenomenon?


Keywords: Reading at Risk, Literacy, Technology, Professional Practice
Stream: Literacy
Presentation Type: 60 minute Workshop Presentation in English
Paper: A paper has not yet been submitted.


Prof. Marnie Jones

Professor of English, University of North Florida
Jacksonville, Florida, USA

Marnie Jones's current research project explores how fundamentalist theology impacts the reading experience of children. One aspect of that work appears in "The International Journal of the Book" Volume 3:"The Threat to Imagination in Children's Literature: 'Harry Potter' and the Kids 'Left Behind.'" Her book, "Holy Toledo: Religion and Politics in the Life of "Golden Rule" Jones," dramatized the experience of a radical reformer attempting to run the city of Toledo on the most generous of principles. As Director of the Honors Program at the University of North Florida (1993-2001), she led students on course-based trips to China, Peru, Argentina, Brazil, Ireland, England, Italy, and Ghana.

Ref: B06P0152